TCHRD releases two new publications on ‘village democracy’ and UN human rights instruments

Article 7 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) proclaims that ‘all are equal before the law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of law.’ Although the government of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has signed many UN treaties and conventions, it has consistently failed to implement and abide by them, and has resorted to its domestic laws and regulations to violate the basic and legitimate rights of its citizens.

As a member of the United Nations, the PRC is under legal obligation to educate its citizens, and implement within its territorial boundary, the laws, conventions and treaties of the UN. Instead of raising popular awareness about international human rights law, more emphasis is put on repressive domestic laws promoted and propagated under forced education campaigns such as ‘legal education’ or ‘patriotic education’.

To counter this, the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD), Dharamsala, has come out with two new publications titled “Nyamdrel Gyaltsog Ki Trim Yig Khag” (‘A Collection of United Nations’ Conventions) and “Sota Chen Ki Mangtso” (‘Monitored Democracy’).

The former is a collection of five international human rights instruments translated into Tibetan: Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment against Torture; International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination; Declaration on the Right to Development; International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance; and UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders.

The second publication is a special report, available both in Tibetan and Chinese language, that debunks the Chinese government’s claim that it has implemented ‘village democracy’ (Ch: cunmin zizhi) in the villages of Tibet in accordance with the ‘Organic Law of the Villagers Committees of the PRC’ (OLVC) introduced in 1987 and formalized in 1998.

Cover of the Tibetan translation of international human rights instruments

Under the 1998 Organic Law of the Villagers’ Committee of the People’s Republic of China, villagers can directly elect members to the Village Committee (Ch: cunmin weiyuanhui), which is authorised to manage the public affairs of the village taking into account the interests of the villagers. China’s Constitution also mandates that villages should be governed by democratically elected, autonomous committees chosen from among villagers themselves.

In its numerous white papers and during the 2013 Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, the government of the PRC made staggering claims of implementing ‘village democracy’ or ‘grassroots democracy’ in the rural areas. In its last report to UPR Working Group of the HRC, the Chinese government maintained that it had introduced “direct elections” to set up Village Committees in 98 percent of villages in the PRC. The white paper titled ‘Development and Progress in Tibet’, issued to coincide with the 2013 UPR, claimed widespread community-level democracy and successful “direct election” to Village Committees in Tibetan areas.

This special report analyzes the so-called village democracy in the rural areas of Tibet and China. In doing so, it lays bare the true intentions of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the Chinese government – to further strengthen and deepen the Party’s control of, rather than grant real autonomy to, Tibetan rural areas by preempting any spontaneous and genuine growth of democracy and popular protests that might threaten the Party’s monopoly on power. Indeed, the overriding goal is to ensure stability in the name of village democracy.

In Tibet, the extreme security and surveillance measures undermine the structures and environment required for grassroots democracy. For instance, since late 2011, party control at village level in Tibetan areas has increased considerably. In 2013, official Chinese media reported that five major ‘stability maintenance measures’ had been introduced in Tawu (Ch: Dawu) County in Kardze (Ch: Ganzi) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. These new rules relate to changing the local cadre system in order to root out any cadre that may not be seen to be stamping out dissent and views different from the Party. Cadres in Tawu are to be rotated every three years, interrogated to assure their allegiance to the party and investigated as to their political backgrounds. Other measures relate to dissemination of party propaganda via compulsory villagers propaganda meetings each week and new village surveillance measures.

Cover of the special report on village democracy in Chinese language

This special report shows that the institutionalization of village self-governance has done little to increase the genuine political participation and decision-making power of the rural grassroots communities. The fundamental and crucial limitation comes from the fact that it is the village Party branch and the Party Secretary rather than the Village Committees that indeed control the village affairs and have any final say over decisions affecting the villagers. As a result, the village Party secretary, who has numerous opportunities to manipulate electoral procedures including nomination of the candidates, enjoys discretion to influence the electoral results and the subsequent functioning of the ‘elected’ Village Committee.

Focusing primarily on Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), the report also covers Tibetan areas in the provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu and Yunnan. It features interviews with new Tibetan refugees and their relatives from inside Tibet, who had personally experienced Chinese government’s implementation of ‘village democracy’ in their localities, and a detailed analysis and study of much-touted ‘Organic Law of the Villagers Committees of the PRC’.

Just because elections are held to elect Villagers Committee does not mean that the voters have access to power or any say in how the village affairs are run after the elections. Apart from holding genuine periodic elections, the values of freedom and respect for human rights are essential elements of democracy. As the UN Human Rights Council stated in its resolution 18/6 that these values are embodied in the UDHR and further developed in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which enshrines a host of political rights and civil liberties underpinning meaningful democracies. Without effective protection, promotion and realization of human rights particularly the civil and political rights, the government of the PRC can only showcase the so-called village democracy as professed intention than any real commitment to grant agency to grassroots Tibetan communities.

The new publications are available in hard copies at TCHRD’s Information Booth set up at the 33rd Kalachakra location in Leh, Ladakh (India). The information booth is open until 14 July 2014. Copies can also be ordered from TCHRD’s office in Dharamsala.

Annual Report

TCHRD.ORG

Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) is a registered non-governmental human rights organisation established in January 1996 in Dharamsala (India) with the mission to protect the human rights of the Tibetan people in Tibet and promote the principles of democracy in the exile Tibetan community.
The centre is entirely run and staffed by Tibetans in exile.